Actavis To Buy Forest Labs In $25B Deal

Tom Murphy, AP Business Writer

Irish drugmaker Actavis PLC plans to buy Forest Laboratories Inc. in an approximately $25 billion cash-and-stock combination that will create a company with a product portfolio that includes drugs like the Alzheimer's disease treatment Namenda.

Actavis said Tuesday it will pay Forest shareholders $26.04 in cash and a portion of an Actavis share for each Forest share. The total, per-share price of $89.48 represents a premium of about 25 percent over Forest's closing price Friday of $71.39.

Actavis was formed in 2012 through a $5.6 billion tie-up between generic drugmaker Watson Pharmaceuticals and Actavis Group. It has grown rapidly through acquisitions, including an $8.5 billion deal it closed last fall to buy another Irish drugmaker, Warner Chilcott.

New York-based Forest Labs has been squeezed by generic competition to some of its biggest drugs, including its anxiety and depression drug Lexapro. It also faces the loss of patent protection for Namenda in 2015. The company has launched several new drugs, including the depressive disorder treatment Viibryd and lung disease drug Daliresp, to help make up for those losses.

Forest took an annual loss in fiscal 2012, its first in 15 years, and has faced pressure from billionaire investor Carl Icahn, its second-largest shareholder, according to FactSet.

The company has been working to cut costs under new CEO Brent Saunders, who replaced long-standing leader Howard Solomon last fall. The new leader, backed by Icahn, launched plans to cut about 500 jobs as part of a goal to trim $500 million in costs.

Tuesday's announcement comes a few weeks after Forest completed its own acquisition, a $2.9 billion purchase of Aptalis, a company that makes treatments for gastrointestinal problems and cystic fibrosis.